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Rh carries foliage, it produces as much timber as the common form. The variety is considered of some importance in France, as owing to the lateness of leafing it is never affected by spring frosts; and it is recommended for cold, damp situations where the common oak is injured by this cause.

Many other varieties doubtless occur, both in cultivation and in the wild state. Specimens were sent to Kew from an old oak tree at Springfield, West Wickham, Kent, which bore extremely large leaves all over the tree, measuring as much as 8 inches long and 6 inches wide, and similar leaves occur on a tree at Colesborne. At Tortworth there is an oak about fifty years old, which bears fruit on very long peduncles, and has remarkably glossy coriaceous leaves somewhat variable in shape, but generally obovate-lanceolate, with quite entire or only slightly lobed margin. This is almost identical with a specimen at Kew, gathered near Arcachon in France by Mdme. de Vilmorin. Specimens collected in Wistman's Wood, Dartmoor, are also remarkable for their irregularly shaped and very slightly lobed leaves, which have a cuneate base.

The variation in the size and shape of the leaves in natural wild seedlings growing side by side is often remarkable. Elwes gathered from three trees growing on the rocks above Minard Castle, Lochfyne, leaves varying from about 2 to 8 inches long. Meehan narrates that when he settled in Germantown, near Philadelphia, he found a single Quercus Robur on the grounds of Mr. J. Hacker, from the acorns of which he raised hundreds of young seedlings, and has from these a second generation. He found amongst the seedlings numerous varieties, e.g. trees with leaves quite sessile, others with a petiole ¼ inch long, others with leaves as entire as those of Quercus Prinus, others with pinnatifid lobes; while in some cases the acorns were only a little longer than broad, in other cases cylindrical and twice as long as broad. Evidently here there was no possibility of hybridisation, as there was only one tree. This experiment of Meehan's, however, only goes to show the extreme variability of Q. pedunculata; and there is no evidence brought forward that any of the varieties became in the least like Q. sessiliflora.

In all the preceding varieties we are treading on safe ground, as there is no doubt that they are all derived from Q. pedunculata; but the case is different with certain forms from the Orient and southern Europe, which were considered by De Candolle to be varieties of Q. pedunculata, but by other authorities are treated as distinct species. A brief account of such of these as are in cultivation in England follows:—

Quercus Haas, Kotschy, ''Die Eiche. Eur. u. Or. t. 2 (1862); Q. Robur, pedunculata,'' var. Haas, DC. Prod.—This oak occurs in Cilicia and the Taurus, and in habit and size resembles the common oak; it differs in the following respects:— Young shoots white pubescent, puberulous when adult. Buds finely pubescent. Leaves on very short pubescent stalks, obovate, with cordate base, and four or five